Harry Morgan

Harry Morgan, original name Harry Bratsburg, (born April 10, 1915, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.—died December 7, 2011, Los Angeles, California), American actor best known for his television work, particularly as the gruff but kindhearted Col. Sherman T. Potter on M*A*S*H.

He was raised in Muskegon, Michigan. He enrolled at the University of Chicago in 1933, but, lacking the funds to continue, he found work selling office supplies. He began acting in summer stock productions while working in Washington, D.C., and debuted professionally opposite Frances Farmer in At Mrs. Beam’s at the Westchester Playhouse in Mount Kisco, New York, in 1937. He joined the Group Theatre in New York City that year and tread the boards opposite Farmer again in Clifford Odets’sGolden Boy.

After appearing in several other Broadway productions, he moved to California in 1942 and was signed by 20th Century Fox after a scout saw him in a staging of Hello Out There. Bratsburg made his film debut that year in To the Shores of Tripoli, a World War II recruitment movie, under the name Henry Morgan. He later performed as Harry Morgan to avoid confusion with another actor. In 1943 he starred opposite Henry Fonda in the gritty western The Ox-Bow Incident. Morgan then accepted supporting roles as a tenant farmer in Dragonwyck (1946) and as a lecherous soda jerk in The Gangster (1947).

Though he continued to appear in films, among them the moralistic western High Noon (1952) and Inherit the Wind (1960), about the Scopes trial, Morgan spent much of the latter portion of his career on the small screen. He had a recurring role on the situation comedyDecember Bride (1954–59), which led to the development of Pete and Gladys (1960–62), a spin-off focusing on the marriage of his character, Pete Porter. Morgan then starred in the police procedural Dragnet 1967 (1967–70), a revival of an earlier series that had featured his on-screen partner, Jack Webb.

Morgan’s stint (1975–83) on M*A*S*H as the irascible Colonel Potter, for which he won an Emmy Award for best supporting actor in 1980, was his defining role. The show, a comedy-drama about a U.S. mobile army surgical hospital (MASH) in South Korea during the Korean War, was widely praised for its sharp humour, though it courted controversy with its antiwar tone. Morgan reprised the role in the short-lived spin-off After MASH (1983–84).

Morgan also appeared in the television miniseries Roots: The Next Generations (1979) and as U.S. Pres. Harry Truman in Backstairs at the White House (1979). He continued to make television guest appearances into the 1990s.